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kushiro

Jock Wallace - The Extraordinary Life of a Leicester Legend

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Fond memories of that time, I was only a kid and my first experiences of supporting City were when Jock Wallace was manager, we seemed to have lots of Irish and Scottish players back then and always seems to be 2 or 3 good players short of making us a really good side.
Thinking back to then it really brings home how much the game has changed, and not always for the better.

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4 hours ago, kushiro said:

Then at half time, referee Jack Husband, 44, collapsed and died in the dressing room.  These days the game would no doubt have been called off, but back then, the game had to go on

 

Wait. What, now?

 

Wow.

 

 

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16)  April Showers

 

Jock and Daphne were married in April 1960, two months after that Cup exit at Leicester. As you can see, they were showered with confetti. 

 

Apr14th-1960.jpg

 

It was a recurring theme that spring. 

 

Just before the wedding, he'd been the guest at the Atherstone Shrovetide football game when, reports tell us, Jock 'showered local children with sweets, oranges and coppers'. 

 

Then at the end of April, Jock was on the receiving end when he upset the crowd at Birmingham City. He deliberately belted the ball into the crowd (it seems, to waste time) and his clearance injured an eight year old boy, who had to be treated by medical staff. Not a good idea to upset those Small Heath lads. The home fans pelted Jock 'with apple cores and cartons', and at the end, he was jostled as he left the pitch. It didn't help that Albion won 7-1. 

 

A week later came the inevitable kiss and make-up story - with the boy who'd been hit beaming broadly as Jock presented him with lemonade in the dressing room before the return match at The Hawthorns. 

 

17)   Come On Leicester!!!!!

 

The following season, 1960/61, Leicester went on an amazing run of 13 games unbeaten that took us into the last four of the FA Cup and up to fifth place in the League. It was just like the 'Ice Kings' run two years later.

 

Then, just before our semi-final with Sheffield United, we had a League fixture - at West Brom. That's where the run came to an end. Jock kept us out and Albion won 1-0. 

 

And to connect with another recent thread, look at this photo:

 

Bernie-WBA-pic-Mar-1961.jpg

 

It was taken by our old friend Bernie Henson. The place and date are not recorded, but a bit of detective work identifies it as the Main Stand at The Hawthorns in the early sixties, and the most likely occasion is that 1-0 defeat in March 1961.

 

18)  In the Final that year, of course, we faced Spurs, who had already won the League. A week before Wembley, Spurs' final League game was at home to West Brom - and they needed just a point to break the all time record of 66 points, held by Arsenal. 

 

They couldn't manage it. Albion won 2-1, and the hero was Jock Wallace. The only time Spurs beat him was when Bobby Smith 'bundled home a shot with all the grace of a dustman aiming a crude kick at a cat'. Apart from that all they could offer were a stream of high crosses 'that Wallace always cut out'.

 

19)  The other big Wembley occasion that spring was the famous 'nearly ten past Haffey' game - England 9 Scotland 3. 

 

How close was Jock to being in goal for Scotland that day? When he joined Albion in 1959, he was either second or third in line, and he said it might take him two years to break into the Scottish XI. Well, that time had elapsed, and Jock was still to win a cap. Why?

 

In truth, despite numerous heroic displays for Albion, he was prone to the odd 'dodgy keeper' performance. These reports would have reached the ears of Scottish selectors, who may even have witnessed one of these lapses in the flesh.

 

Jock would always regret that he couldn't win the cap that both he and his father longed for - but I wonder if a part of him was relieved that it was Frank Haffey, not him, that endured the humiliation of conceding nine goals to the old enemy on that April afternoon.

 

 

20)  The following season, 1961/62, Jock's playing career took a downward turn. He was only 27, but he was struggling for form. A week before Albion's big Cup tie at neighbours Wolves, Jock's howler gave Burnley a late equaliser. You can see it at 11.00 in this video:

 

West Brom v Burnley 1961-2 - YouTube

 

Jock had been dropped earlier in the season, but he kept his place for the Wolves game, and was back to his best as Albion won 2-1. The beautiful photo below captures a rare uncertain moment for him in that game. Don Howe is the Albion number 2, Bobby Robson on the right.

 

At-Wolves.jpg

 

In the next round, holders Spurs came to the Hawthorns and won 4-2 on their way to retaining the trophy.

 

A couple of weeks later, the BBC filmed a fly-on-the-wall documentary at Albion. It's a fantastic portrayal of English football in a different age. 

 

 

 

If you don't have 30 minutes to spare, just have a look at the sexy beast in the shower about four minutes in.

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On 07/09/2022 at 08:24, Twitcher said:

I remember him getting the players running up hills for their fitness, more like large man-made mounds of earth.

I also remember his statement "I'll fight like a bear for Leicester."

The McLintock season had been so bad. It's what we needed to hear.

 

 

Edited by l444ry
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Great memories of the 79-80 promotion season. I had just past my driving test  living in High Wycombe and suddenly I was able to come a bit more regularly.

 

I remember away trips to Cambridge United and the cow dung fights, Orient and the goalposts and Watford with torrential rain. I spent a whole weeks wages about 30 quid hiring a van, my ticket, fuel and a beer and a 1 0 win against Newcastle with a Bobby Smith goal. Great great days and Jock made them possible.

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On 07/09/2022 at 21:22, kushiro said:

11)  In 1955, Jock Jr. began his National Service. He was posted to Malaya, where the UK was trying to suppress an independence uprising.

 

His time in Malaya showed him the value of hard, disciplined training and also how good teamwork could mean the difference between life and death. The lessons he learned would guide him for the rest of his life.

 

KOSB-in-Malaya.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

I imagine that he would be an inspiring comrade in arms..... but teamwork.....I think it was Dennis Rofe who said the players sometimes did not understand his pitch side instructions

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The main topic of today's installment is the match that has its own wikipedia page, a match that without exaggeration can be described as the biggest Scottish Cup shock of the 20th century.

 

26)  Two months after Jock became Berwick player-manager, they were given a dream draw in the First Round of the Scottish Cup - Rangers at home. 

 

Rangers were not the most popular club in Berwick - for several reasons.

 

Three years before, Rangers had pushed for a restructuring of Scottish football that would have meant Berwick and four other small clubs being thrown out of the League. After a long legal battle, the plan was eventually rejected.

 

That hadn't been forgotten - and nor had Rangers' previous visit to Berwick in 1960. They won 3-0 in the Cup that day, and their fans celebrated by smashing up the town. This is from the Daily Herald:

 

Three thousand fans blazed a trail of destruction through Berwick town centre on Saturday night. They smashed 15 shop windows and looted hundreds of pounds worth of goods during an all-night drinking spree.

 

Publican Arthur Embleton of the Royal Hotel said, "They stole everything in view, including 7,000 cigarettes". The Berwick telephone exchange was choked with calls from publicans seeking police help. Though the fans drank 250 gallons of whisky, publicans said 'we don't want them here again'.

 

Now in 1967, Rangers were back - and expected to stroll to another easy win against Jock's team. After all, they had never been beaten by a Second Division club.  

 

27)  January 28th 1967

 

At the start of the match, Rangers launched attack after attack, but they couldn't get past Jock. Then after thirty minutes came Sammy Reid's historic goal, a moment captured in this grainy video footage:

 

 

The half time score was 1-0, and in the second half, Jock was still stopping everything. Here he is commanding his area in typical fashion:

 

Wallace-v-Rangers-1967.jpg

 

They couldn't beat Jock by fair means, so they tried something else. Rangers defender Colin Jackson later recalled what happened: 

 

We realised that Jock was the guy who was stopping us so Willie Johnston tried to do him. Jock came for a cross and Willie went in slightly over the top. Actually it was waist height and he clattered into Big Jock. But Jock was an old campaigner so the way he turned he gave it back to Willie and broke his ankle.

 

Berwick held on and Rangers were out. The Scotsman newspaper called it the most ludicrous, the weirdest, the most astonishing result ever returned in Scottish football.”

 

28)  Berwick were drawn against HIbernian away in the next round, and they nearly caused another upset. They had a goal controversially disallowed and Jock saved a penalty, but in the end they lost 1-0.

 

What were Rangers doing that day? Having been knocked out, they had a free weekend, and they decided to head south for a match against - Leicester City.  

 

It was a friendly match, but there was trouble on the terraces, a shower of bottles on the pitch and 30 injuries. Leicester won 1-0. By the time the two clubs played each other again in 1984, Jock was a hero to both sets of supporters.

 

29)   Berwick's next big Cup game, in 1969, was memorable for a different reason - at the time, Jock was doing four jobs at once. He was manager and goalkeeper of Berwick, and had just been appointed by Hearts to the position of 'Assistant manager and coach'. Jock insisted on working for both clubs until Berwick were knocked out of the Cup.

 

In the run up to the Scottish Cup ties on January 6th, Jock was preparing the Berwick players for their game at Aberdeen, and the Hearts players for their trip to Dundee. Had the two clubs been drawn to play each other the situation would have been even more surreal.

 

Berwick lost 3-0, but Hearts won 2-1 at Dundee, and they could now claim sole ownership of the Big Man. 

 

That game at Pittodrie brought the curtain down on Jock's career as a professional footballer. Just like his father, his last game was a defeat in in a Scottish Cup tie. Jock Senior had been 38 and knew his time was up, Jock Junior was now 33, and told the press he was still the best keeper in Scotland. 

 

But it was time to hang up his gloves, and to devote his energy to inspiring others.

 

30) Hearts had big plans for Jock Wallace. Second in command at first, they saw him as the long-term successor to boss John Harvey.

 

Part of Jock's long-term plan at Tynecastle was to blood the youngsters - it was here that he first realised the benefits of giving youth a chance. Two of them, Eddie Thomson and Davie Clunie, were chosen for a Scotland v England Under-23 match at Sunderland in March 1970. Jock wasn't to know it as he traveled down with the two players to Roker Park, but a snow storm that caused the game to be abandoned in the second half would have big long-term consequences.

 

When the game was called off, he walked back to his hotel in the snow with Rangers assistant boss Willie Thornton. Jock spoke about his ideas - and Thornton was impressed. He went away with an idea of his own. 

 

Edited by kushiro
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